A Holiday War-on-Terror Travel Guide
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Nick Turse
by Tom Engelhardt and
Nick Turse
DIGG THIS
How the year does cycle round! The holidays are already upon us
and, before you know it, you'll be desperate for gift ideas. Next
year, we, here at Tomdispatch, are planning to do our duty and roll
out a real seasonal commercial bonanza for TD readers. Unfortunately,
the factory at which we expected to produce our new line of products,
including in honor of the coming Congressional investigation
season Bush Administration Mug Shot Mugs and a whole line
of Tomdispatch sports apparel for the computer-impaired, got outsourced
before we could purchase it. But wait until next year and,
in the meantime, lawyers and lovers of constitutional rights among
you might pay a visit to Illegalbriefs.com
("Be a lawyer, don't dress like one"), the amusing website of a
former student of mine, where you can purchase "I [heart] Habeas"
T-shirts and other less mentionables.
Fortunately, Tomdispatch did release two perfect stocking-stuffers
just in time for the holiday season. For anyone eager to indict
the President and his cohorts, a year-ending must-have is former
federal prosecutor Elizabeth de la Vega's Tomdispatch book, United
States v. George W. Bush et al., launched from this site only
two weeks ago and already #33 on the New
York Times nonfiction paperback bestseller list! Check out
De la Vega's hilarious appearance on The Colbert Report (here
and here)
as well as the "Wings
of Justice Award" that Buzzflash.com just gave her, and then
rush to Amazon.com
or the website
of independent publisher Seven Stories Press and get one for
everybody you know and love.
For those of you who would like a little extra company of a special
sort a provocative thinker or two ready to sit down to a
Holiday feast with you or entertain your New Year's visitors
there's Mission
Unaccomplished: Tomdispatch Interviews with American Iconoclasts
and Dissenters. In addition, by buying both books in staggering
quantities, you'll experience the holiday cheer of knowing that
you are supporting this site for all you're worth. Now, prepare
yourself for a pre-holiday treat, our traditional Nick Turse seasonal
festival of suggestions, this year on how to get away in style.
~ Tom
On Holiday for the Holidays: A Christmas Travel
Guide
By Nick ("Tongue Firmly in Cheek") Turse
Back in 2003, Tomdispatch offered you a
list of "Hot as Depleted Uranium Toys for a New Imperial Age."
In 2004, we gave you the inside
scoop on how to "Make It a Merry Military-Corporate Christmas."
And last year, it was all about timeless holiday values like militarism,
jingoism, and barbarism, as Tomdispatch wished
you an "All-American Christmas."
This year instead of offering a buyers guide to Christmas
favorites like the instantly classic
T-shirt with Santa brandishing an automatic rifle, or the
mouse
pad featuring a B-52 bomber festooned with Christmas decorations,
or even the children's "Peacekeepers"
play set in which nearly all 100 accessories appear to be
bazookas, rifles, pistols, mortars, grenades, mines, and other
accoutrements we regularly associate with peace on Earth
Tomdispatch will provide you with your own special holiday
travel guide (with all the tips you need for that quick seasonal
getaway). So find your passport, pack your bags, and let us transport
you with a holiday travel guide so complete it can't be beat.
Travel Togs
Unless you're the recipient of an all-expenses paid, CIA extraordinary-rendition
flight, this holiday season is guaranteed to mean long lines at
the airport and intrusive baggage searches. To minimize scrutiny
and lower your score on the Department of Homeland Security's
recently revealed Automated
Targeting System (the massive, data-mining operation that
generates passenger terrorism ratings to be held for 40 years
and shared with everyone but you), Tomdispatch recommends
that you leave your "Suspected
Terrorist" T-shirt at home. You might, however, consider donning
Rightwing.com's Uncle Sam shirt that reads: "I'll
give you jihad you miserable rag-headed heathen bastards"
it's almost certainly government approved). Here, though,
are our special recommendations for airport wear that will truly
get you places:
Homeland Security Gold Mini Shield Cufflinks: The seller
of these "collectible
Goldtone Metallic Cufflinks with a Gold on Gold Metallic Mini
Shield displaying" the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) logo
says they are "a collectible only and do not convey any special
privileges." Okay, so wearing them you might not allow you to
totally bypass airport security and that metal detector
might even go off. Still, once security personnel see these fine
fashion accessories, body-cavity searches are guaranteed to be
out the window.
Homeland Security DHS Mini Shield & Gold Neck Chain:
Like the cufflinks, this Homeland Security bling doesn't
give you privileges per se, but TSA inspectors will be
so mesmerized by this upscale example of national-security jewelry
that they might not even bother to rifle through your bags. Anyway,
why should Mrs. Chertoff be the only one to look DHS-fabulous
this holiday season? So get this gold-plated
charm and chain for your ball and chain this Christmas and
help your loved one speed through airport checkpoints.
Transportation Security Administration/Homeland Security
Uniform: Don the "TSA
Inspector" shirt, baseball cap, similarly logo-emblazoned
windbreaker, and a replica
TSA badge and you might just be able to bypass the lines entirely
one way or another. If you're successful, you'll walk right
through the employee entrance, no fuss, no muss. If not, expect
a special tropical vacation in sunny Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Either
way, it'll be a travel adventure.
Fly the Friendly Spies
If you've had it with the shoddy practices of commercial airlines
like JetBlue's decision to hand
over your itinerary to a Pentagon contractor and bar you from
flying for wearing a t-shirt with
Arabic script or U.S. Airways' practice of engaging in religious
and ethnic profiling and are looking for far more efficient
styles of air travel, check out these boutique companies
offering a once-in-a-lifetime travel experience.
Bayard Foreign Marketing: A shadowy CIA front company
run by a fictitious
person, Bayard is the "owner of a U.S.-registered Gulfstream
V executive jet reportedly used since Sept. 11, 2001" to transport
CIA-kidnapped people to be tortured in foreign lands. Tomdispatch
travel tip: When you book your flight with Bayard, you'll want
to refrain from requesting the Halal meal (it's probably drugged).
It's also safer to say "no" to the complimentary headphones (given
the government's penchant for employing
"earsplittingly loud music," aka "torture
music.")
Premier Executive Transport Services Inc: The
previous owner of Bayard's Gulfstream V, Premier is another
CIA front company whose executives
might not exist but don't let that stop you. Request their
rendition adventure package, then sit back and relax. One extraordinary
day, when you least expect it, black-clad men will surround you,
mace you, stuff you in an orange jumpsuit, toss you in an unmarked
van, drug you, drive you to a "ghost plane," and whisk you off to
the exotic locale of your dreams. Let names like Tashkent or Baku
dance through your brain. Think the ancient Silk Road (or just chains
and a cold concrete prison cell in Afghanistan's charming "Salt
Pit"). Who knows where you'll actually end up, or for how long,
or if the physical, let alone, psychological pain will ever subside?
Not us. But if you want a story sure to trump all your friends'
holiday travel nightmares, then this is the vacation for you.
Jeppesen International Trip Planning: Need a world-class
travel agent to arrange those last minute holiday flights, hotels,
and the like? Look no further than Jeppesen
International, a Boeing subsidiary which, according to the
New
Yorker's Jane Mayer, plans some of the CIA's "secret ‘extraordinary
rendition' flights for terrorism suspects." Bob Overby, the managing
director of Jeppesen, has reportedly crowed, "We do all of the
extraordinary rendition flights you know, the torture flights."
All?! C'mon Bob, don't be such a braggart! But, seriously,
if you want experienced travel agents who aren't afraid to get
their hands dirty, think Jeppesen.
America: Love It and Leave It
The superpatriot axiom has always been: America, love it or
leave it! But that line of thinking is so hopelessly narrow-minded.
After all, real Americans have always been internationalists.
Think: the Philippines, Haiti, Nicaragua, Korea, Vietnam, Cambodia,
and Laos for starters. When you've been so active abroad, staying
at home means missing all the fun. After all, what good is it
being an American, if you can't head for Hiroshima wearing a patriotic
T-shirt like "USA:
We Got the Nukes!" or one with a
mushroom cloud that reads: "Made in America, Tested in Japan."
Of course, some people really want to go where the seasonal
action is. Luckily, the military makes that easy. Just enlist
in the Army, request the infantry, and you have a virtual guarantee
of a holiday season in Baghdad or Kabul. If you don't believe
Tomdispatch, just visit the U.S. Central Command's Afghanistan
website and click on: "Newcomers Kabul Fact Sheet."
Centcom starts off by noting the obvious that the "trip
to Kabul, Afghanistan is exhausting"; in other words, so incredibly
fun-filled that it will positively wear you out. And no wonder!
"Total travel time normally takes 37 days…"
On your end-of-the-world dream trip to Kabul, "at some point
you arrive at Manas Air Base, Kyrgyzstan," playground for the
(fighter) jet set. Then, it's on to that old jewel of the Russian
occupation of the 1980s, Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan (and,
don't forget, you're also retracing the steps of Alexander the
Great!) I know what you're saying: How much more could there possibly
be? But you're only getting started.
Your globetrotting ends when you arrive at "Camp Eggers compound"
"a series of buildings with a diverse population" just
"next
door to [Afghan] President [Hamid] Karzai's palace." Talk
about swanky digs! You'll soon remember why you embarked on this
seasonal jaunt, helped along by the "high altitude [that] may
take some people time to get used to" in a land where "very dry
summers are hot, and winters are very cold with a lot of snow."
Think of it as the Aruba of Central Asia.
You're probably ready to run out to the nearest recruiting station
this minute but take a breath, dear reader. You haven't
even heard about the amenities available for holiday travelers
in the military (nor, I bet, taken the mandatory malaria meds
that sometimes "can cause psychotic episodes").
First off, consider that scenic Camp Eggers stroll down "Gator
Alley" at the end of which you'll find the "Warrior Gym." Or, if
a long voyage, has left you yearning for fine dining, then you'll
just hustle over to the "the Goat House" where "meals are currently
served by a civilian contractor, Kellogg Brown and Root (KBR)."
Or check out the "Goat House Annex" where a massive bank of 1012
phones will allow you (and every other member of the Army, Navy,
Air Force, and Marines on location) to call home with good tidings.
And don't forget the well-appointed "Bomb House" recreation center
featuring "two pool tables, a foosball table, and two dart
boards."
If the camp's festive surroundings prove too limited for you,
then just head off base to the lovely Kabul
Golf Club. In 2004, Tomdispatch recommended an annual membership
there for a mere 7,500 Afghanis just $160. If you didn't
get in on the ground floor then, you'll pay double the price now
15,000 Afghanis or $300, but still a bargain. After all,
the formerly landmine-laden course is, its website claims, "now
free of ‘some' of the military hazards." Plus, for $5 extra you
get not one but – count 'em two indigenous child caddies:
"a bag caddie to carry your clubs up and down the hills, and also
a fore caddie who'll run forward to spot where your ball lands."
You'll feel, if not like Alexander, then just like a British colonial
occupier-of-old. "When's the last time you enjoyed such luxury?,"
the site asks. When,
indeed?
But you're surely tired by now. Luckily for you, the "School
House Basement" is at hand with a plush, two-man, 13ft x 4ft room
or, if too many other revelers are on hand, you may bunk down
with as many as eight jovial fellow vacationers in a well-appointed
Camp Eggers suite.
Last Resort
If the sheer fun Camp Eggers offers wears you out, you've got
plenty of other options via the military's posh Morale, Welfare,
and Recreation (MWR) resort system. Why not hop a military transport
to any number of countries the U.S. has bombed, shelled, or laid
waste to in the past, to kick back and relax? Consider:
The New Sano: Offering "149 luxurious rooms," a new fitness
center, "a heated swimming pool, sun deck, Jacuzzi, children's
pool, and his and her saunas," a stay in this "American-style
MWR oasis in downtown
Tokyo" allows you to immerse yourself in real Japanese culture
by eating at: Wellingtons, a Federalist decor restaurant that
serves such traditional local fare as "Beef Wellington, Veal Scaloppini
or Twin Lobster Tails"; or a tad more downscale, check out Hero's
sandwich shop, where you can get traditional Japanese hamburgers
and pizza.
Edelweiss Lodge and Resort: Who needs to watch The
Sound of Music this holiday season when you can check into
this "idyllic location nestled at the foot of sweeping Alpine
vistas"? Not only does this U.S.
military resort in Germany offer: a grand ballroom, sports
lodge, multiple restaurants, an indoor pool, a "wellness center",
wet and dry saunas, and outdoor hot tub as well as a "vacation
village and campgrounds," but you can even tee off at "one of
Germany's most beautiful golf courses…the breathtaking Alpental
Golf Course [which] provides for an exhilarating game and a tour
of the Loisach Valley's highlights of waterfalls, rushing river,
towering Alps and lush green landscape."
Dragon Hill Lodge: Located in Seoul, South Korea, this
resort
offers nearly 400 guestrooms, authentic Korean restaurants (like
Pizza Hut, Subway and Oasis as well as "a full service restaurant
and brewery featuring your choice of American or Mexican favorites…"),
two bars, a health club, and videogame arcades. And, on the first
clear day, you can head north to the DMZ for a fabulous view of
any future North Korean nuclear tests or the odd Taepodong-2 missile
wobbling overhead on its way to a landing in the Sea of Japan.
Whichever resort you choose, make sure to sit back, relax, and
forget the worries of the two wars currently being lost amid evidence
of the good old days when the U.S. military was truly supreme.
Spies Like Us
For the discerning holiday traveler, who demands only the best
in careers and accommodations skip that local
recruiting office and head directly for Langley,
Virginia. Just to give you a sense of what's in store for
you, as early as Christmas season 2008, consider the Italian getaway
package that Jeppesen International or other CIA travel agents
arranged for the CIA kidnappers of Egyptian
cleric Mustafa Omar Nasr back in 2003.
Here were just a few of the places our own stressed-out James
Bonds got to visit (all-expenses picked up by U.S. taxpayers)
while planning, carrying out, and recovering from their extraordinary
rendition adventure. So feel free to begin to dream… right now:
Start with the posh Milan
Westin Palace where, for about $390 per night, you'll enjoy
your richly appointed "classic room," sporting "classic Italian
décor… [and] contemporary amenities for your relaxation, including
signature Heavenly Bed® and a flat-screen television." While there,
you can also enjoy their "new fitness centre, housing two Turkish
Baths… four treatment rooms [that] offer a variety of services,
including those designed specifically for couples" and "the essence
of Mediterranean cuisine at [the] renowned Casanova Grill Restaurant."
From the Westin, wheel that tax-financed rental car over to
the Hotel Principe di Savoia, also in Milan the perfect
place for civil servants on a budget which "features a
marble-lined spa" and "minibar Cokes that cost about $10." Check
in and head to the spa for a facial with "special treatment" (cost:
$210), a hot stone massage (cost: $170), or an hour of "modeling
breast treatment" to "tone up and model the bust" (giveaway cost:
$70). This Xmas season, that executive suite the perfect
thing for the traveling kidnapper will cost someone other
than you almost $2000 per night; so, be prepared to drop at least
$42,000 at the hotel just as the CIA did back in 2003, but know
in your hot-stone-massage of a heart that it will be worth it.
If that's not enough pampering for one operation, then drop
in on the Ligurian Riviera seaside resort town of La Spezia for
a short romp, just like the cohabitating male and female CIA agents
did back then, or like them pay a restful visit to top spots in
Florence, Tuscany, and Tyrol in the Italian Alps. What's left
to say but Buon
viaggio!
Okay, so you don't happen to find Italian such a melodic language.
We all have our tastes and the CIA is ready and willing
to accommodate. Why not, for instance, ask Jeppesen to send you
on the journey they planned out for the CIA kidnappers of Khaled
el-Masri, the "German car salesman who was apparently mistaken
for an Al Qaeda suspect with a similar name" in 2004. Make sure
you let them know, though, that you don't want the Masri treatment
(being stripped naked and shackled by masked men before being
forced onto a Boeing 737 business jet) and instead want to be
treated just like the CIA kidnap team that, after dumping Masri
in an Afghan prison, jetted
off to "the resort island of Majorca [Spain] where, for two
nights, crew members stayed at a luxury hotel, at taxpayers' expense."
There, on the sunny Mediterranean island, you'll live it up at
one of two hotels reported to be CIA faves: the Gran
Melia Victoria, which offers "junior suites" for $770 per night
or "grand suites" for just under $1,600 per night, or the 5-star
Mallorca Marriott Son Antem Golf Resort & Spa with its two 18-hole
courses and a "Holistic Lifestyle Spa." As you leave, don't forget
to order
up (just as your fellow spooks have done before you)"three bottles
of fine Spanish wine, and five crystal glasses from Mallorcair,
one of the plane's ground handling agents – [as] refreshments for
the flight home" and charge it to the ever grateful American taxpayer.
Home(land) for the Holidays
Tomdispatch takes genuine pleasure in providing this indispensable
holiday-season travel guide for you. But we also know that, no
matter how great the trip like an innocent man kidnapped
off the streets, flown halfway around the world, locked in a cage,
humiliated, abused, tortured, and held incommunicado for a few
years you'll eventually want to come home. It's
only natural, given the glories of the US of A. So, as is Tomdispatch
tradition, we leave you with new lyrics to a holiday song that
celebrates this great homeland of ours sung to the tune
of the 1954 classic "(There's No Place Like) Home for the Holidays"
made famous by Perry Como:
(There's No Place Like) the Homeland for the Holidays
Oh, there's no place like the homeland for the holidays,
'Cause the NSA will always tap your phone,
If you want to be spied on in a million ways,
For the holidays you can't beat home sweet home.
I met a man who lives in Tennessee,
And he was fearful of
harassment by the U-S-F-B-I,
From Pennsylvania, folks are being
tracked to Dixie's sunny shore,
From Atlantic to Pacific,
the surveillance is horrific.
Oh, there's no place like
the homeland for the holidays,
'Cause with toothpaste
they may not let you roam
When you fit the profile
they throw you in a cage,
For the holidays, you can't beat
Home, sweet home.
[instrumental refrain]
Oh there's no place like the homeland for the holidays,
'cause overhead there's always
spying
drone,
If you want to be locked up for a million days
For the holidays, you can't beat
Home, sweet home
For
the holidays you can't beat home sweet home(land)!
December
15, 2006
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His new blog is The
Notion. Nick Turse is the associate editor and
research director of Tomdispatch.com. He has written for the San
Francisco Chronicle, the Nation, the Village Voice, and regularly
for Tomdispatch. Articles from his recent Los Angeles Times series,
"The War Crimes Files," can be found here.
Copyright
© 2006 Nick Turse
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Engelhardt Archives
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